Indiana School Improvement Plan

Saint Charles Borromeo School

Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend

Mr. Robert R Sordelet, Administrator4910 Trier Road

Fort Wayne, IN 46815


Document Generated On November 29, 2016

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction1

Executive Summary

Introduction3Description ofthe School 4School's Purpose 6Notable Achievements and Areasof Improvement 7Additional Information 8

Improvement Plan Stakeholder Involvement

Introduction10Improvement Planning Process 11

Self Assessment

Introduction13

Standard 1: Purposeand Direction14

Standard 2: Governanceand Leadership17Standard 3: Teaching and Assessingfor Learning 19Standard 4: Resources andSupport Systems 23Standard 5: Using Results forContinuous Improvement 26

Student Performance Diagnostic

Introduction31Student Performance Data 32Evaluative Criteriaand Rubrics 33Areas ofNotable Achievement 34Areas in Needof Improvement 36Report Summary 38

Stakeholder Feedback Diagnostic

Introduction40Stakeholder Feedback Data 41Evaluative Criteriaand Rubrics 42Areas ofNotable Achievement 43Areas in Needof Improvement 45Report Summary 48

St. Charles Borromeo Indiana School Improvement Plan 2016-17

Overview50

Goals Summary51Goal 1: All students will improve reading comprehension acrossthe curriculum. 52Goal 2: All students will demonstrate typical to high growthin Math. 54

Activity Summary by Funding Source57

Introduction

The comprehensive Indiana School Improvement Plan aligns the improvement requirements for schools under Title I, PL221, and the Student Achievement Plan (SAP) for focus and priority schools.

Executive Summary

Introduction

Every school has its own story to tell. The context in which teaching and learning takes place influences the processes and procedures by which the school makes decisions around curriculum, instruction, and assessment. The context also impacts the way a school stays faithful to its vision. Many factors contribute to the overall narrative such as an identification of stakeholders, a description of stakeholder engagement, the trends and issues affecting the school, and the kinds of programs and services that a school implements to support student learning.

The purpose of the Executive Summary (ES) is to provide a school with an opportunity to describe in narrative form the strengths and challenges it encounters. By doing so, the public and members of the school community will have a more complete picture of how the school perceives itself and the process of self-reflection for continuous improvement. This summary is structured for the school to reflect on how it provides teaching and learning on a day to day basis.

Description of the School

Describe the school's size, community/communities, location, and changes it has experienced in the last three years. Include demographic information about the students, staff, and community at large. What unique features and challenges are associated with the community/communities the school serves?

St. Charles Borromeo School is a kindergarten through eighth grade Catholic school located on Fort Wayne's northeast side and is part of the Fort Wayne-South Bend Diocese. Enrollment, as of November 2016, stood at 712 students, 350 boys and 362 girls. Class size is held to thirty-one students with three classrooms per grade level. Our school is a service ministry of our larger St. Charles Borromeo Parish. Our students come from a wide range of socioeconomic backgrounds and represent a steadily growing cultural diversity. In July of 2011, our school began to participate in the School Choice Scholarship Program. In this current school year 2016-2017, we have 389 students assisted through this initiative, which is 17 less from the previousyear.

St. Charles Borromeo School is situated in Northeast Fort Wayne. The school campus is bordered by Trier Road on the north and Reed Road on the west. A residential area consisting of single family homes and condominiums border the school property to the east and south. Our Church and our Priests' Rectory are independent dwellings located to the south of the school building. Our Franciscan Sisters of the Order of the Sacred Heart have a Convent located on the west side of Reed Road, directly across from the Rectory. Snider High School, Lane Middle School, and Glenwood Elementary School are located three hundred yards down Reed Road toward the south. A Fort Wayne Fire Department Station is located between our school and Lane Middle School.

The Fort Wayne, IN Metropolitan Statistical Area is a federally designated metropolitan area consisting of three counties in northeastern Indiana (Allen, Wells, and Whitley counties), anchored by the city of Fort Wayne. As of 2011, the MSA had a population of 419,453. The Fort Wayne metropolitan area is part of the Northern Indiana region, containing about 2.2 million people, and is considered part of the Great Lakes Megalopolis, which contains an estimated 54 millionpeople.

The City of Fort Wayne, as of 2014, had a population of 258,522 residents. Our school is located within a heavily populated and well- developed area of northeastern Fort Wayne. Within a three mile radius residents can access four grocery stores, several shopping centers, Churches, restaurants, the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum, and Glenbrook Mall, which has over 15 million visitors per year.

Additionally, St. Charles School is easily accessible from all areas of the city of Fort Wayne. The school is 3-4 miles from access points to of the Interstate 469 Bypass to the east and north or Interstate 69 to the west. We are also 3-4 miles from direct connections to the City of New Haven with a population of 15,000 residents.

St. Charles Borromeo is a Parish School. Ninety-two percent of our students are St. Charles Borromeo parishioners. Four percent of our students are members of other parishes in the area, and 4% of our students are non-Catholic. Most students arrive by car, and some walk or ride bikes. Most students live close to the school. Records show that most of the students live in north-northeast Fort Wayne.

Many of the students complete all nine years of their elementary education at St. Charles, and the average years of experience forthe teaching staff is 15 years. St. Charles School is annually accredited by AdvancEd and the Indiana Department of Education. We have received the Four-Star and "A" rating from the IDOE. St. Charles follows State, National, and Diocesan standards as appropriate and applicable.

St. Charles Borromeo School is staffed by three state certified administrators and 40 state certified teachers. This includes full-time teachers in music, art, computers, physical education, special education, resource, and a media specialist as well. There are also four part-time tutors, three resource paraprofessionals, a part-time Title I teacher, full time resource teachers, and a gifted and talented resource teacher.

Additional staff members include a Spanish teacher, a Director of Special Education, a school counselor, a band director, a choir director, a strings teacher, an administrative secretary, school secretary, a religious education consultant, a youth minister, part-time teacher assistants for all grades, a part-time nurse, a cafeteria manager; and a seven- person maintenance staff. Fort Wayne Community Schools provide testing by licensed doctors and consultants.

Currently St. Charles Borromeo school is served by a School Board, Home and School Association, Music and Fine Arts Booster Committee, an Athletic Board, and a Student Council. Each of these organizations is active and contributes in a variety of ways to the excellence of School Community. St. Charles has an extensive parent volunteer program and a modest, active senior citizen volunteer program. The school also has a before and after school care program to accommodate families.

School's Purpose

Provide the school's purpose statement and ancillary content such as mission, vision, values, and/or beliefs. Describe how the school embodies its purpose through its program offerings and expectations for students.

St. Charles' Vision: Share Faith. Serve Others. Seek Knowledge.

St. Charles' Mission: To teach, love, live, and learn as Jesus did.

Beliefs - St. Charles Borromeo School believes that:

1.Each child is created in God's image and that opportunities are provided to enable all students to reach theirpotential.

2.Parents are the primary educators of their children and we will assist parents in educating their children in the teachings and practicesof theirfaith.

3.All children deserve a safe, loving, and respectful environment where children and faculty can grow spiritually andacademically.

4.Each member of the school community is called to a personal relationship with JesusChrist.

5.We are members of a larger church community whose role is to proclaim the Gospel message and celebrate through prayer, worship,and service.

An integral part of St. Charles is the personal, religious, and spiritual growth of the students. Our atmosphere has always fostered learning the traditional truths and teachings of the Catholic Faith. Catholic values are further reinforced as students prepare for and take part in weekly grade level and all school liturgies. The sacramental program is coordinated with the whole parish through the Religious Education Department. Service to others in the community is evidenced by our students' participation in visits to nursing homes, Women's Care Center, the Franciscan Center, and Turnstone Center, among other organizations. School-wide collections gather clothing, food, money, and toys for various organizations. Weekly student collections benefit special hospitals, community outreach organizations, and others in need.

Additionally, to better witness to our community as Catholic Christians, we have established adopting eight families through Catholic Charities to collect Christmas gifts for each year. We take a weekly collection that is donated to area charities. We have also established an annual 1.6 mile Cross Walk of over 200 students and adults to the clinic to bring witness to the community that we disagree with theworkings of the same clinic. Our students pray a decade of the Rosary Monday through Thursday in their homerooms and as a school after the All- School Mass on Friday to equal a Rosary a week. We schedule Eucharistic Adoration, Living Rosary, Reconciliation, and Stations of the Cross for our students and staff throughout the schoolyear.

Notable Achievements and Areas of Improvement

Describe the school's notable achievements and areas of improvement in the last three years. Additionally, describe areas for improvement that the school is striving to achieve in the next three years.

Notable Achievements

Overall St. Charles has been a strong performing school academically as indicated by the ISTEP results. St. Charles has scored above the state average in every subject over the past six years, although we were much closer to the mathematics state average in 2015, with our school only being 5.1 points above the state average. The 2016 ISTEP+ results revealed that we widened that gap positively to 12.4 performance points above the state average.

A comparison of diocesan average 2016 ISTEP+ scores to our school scores gave us a better analysis of our strengths and weaknesses. St. Charles Borromeo School ranked 13 out of 40 schools in the diocese in overall percentage passing of all students in both math and English language arts. We will work to analyze and improve our scores moving forward.

We see fairly consistent performance in many areas and subjects so it is difficult to find areas, which are above expectations. However, in the area of English/language, across most all grade levels, the categories of writing process, writing applications, and writing conventions are a bit above expected levels of performance, and the faculty is seeing consistent performances in daily writing assignments.

In the area of English/language, across most all grade levels, the categories of writing process, writing applications, and writing conventions have been high. In the area of math, the category of number sense is trending positively and the category of measurement is moving in a positive direction in grades 3-7. We will continue to monitor the growth of the new mathematics standards of: number sense, computation, algebra and data analysis, geometry and measurement, and the math process standards.

Our students have done well on IREAD 3. There has only been one student in the past five years that has not passed and this was only by a few points.

Areas of Improvement

In the area of math, our computation, problem solving, and data analysis & probability scores have been below expected performance overall. As we use a supplemental math program, Otter Creek, we would expect the computation scores to show sustained high performance. Our fluctuation in problem solving scores also indicates a need for strengthening our students' overall understanding and attack strategies for multi-step problems. The fluctuations in data analysis & probability reflect a greater need for analyzing data across curricular areas, not just math (graphs, charts, tables, narrative, etc.). We did see a dramatic drop in the percent passing mathematics in 2015, especially in grades 6-8. Our 2016 results showed small gains in these grade levels, but the gains still represent an overall underperformance of expected levels.

Our grade 6 science test scores are very consistent, but just a bit below overall expected levels of performance. We have not scored below 82% in any of the six categories, but we have not scored above 89% in any of the six categories either.

Our grade 5 social studies scores are inconsistent. In four categories we have achieved only two scores above 90% in four years. Our scores have not fallen below 81%, but overall we would like to see consistently higher scores across all categories. We did not participate in the social studies test in 2015 as the state gave the option to cut this to lower the time of testing, but our 2016 scores continued the trend of mediocrity at 82.2% passing.

Additional Information

Provide any additional information you would like to share with the public and community that were not prompted in the previous sections.

St. Charles School offers a well-rounded education. The creative arts program includes a developmental music program, music appreciation course, band, string instruction, choir chime classes, choir, instrumental concerts, song flute program for grade four, I.S.S.M.A. Solo and Ensemble Contests, art classes for grades kindergarten through eight, two yearly musicals, and a Fine Arts Fair.

Students at St. Charles received a wide variety of enrichment experiences. For the 2015-2016 school year, some of these experiences included Junior Achievement, Yearbook Staff, Choices and Challenges Program for grade five, Catholic Skills for Adolescence in grade six, the Journal Gazette Spelling Bee, the National Geography Bee, the St. Charles Science Fair, Learning Fair, the Northeast Indiana Regional Science Fair, and the Indiana Hoosier State Science Fair, Lego Robotics League, Bricks4Kids (kindergarten to grade four), participation in various curricular area competitions, the National Catholic Schools Mathematics Competition, performances and workshops by the Fort Wayne Philharmonic, the Civic Theatre, the Bishop Dwenger Jazz Band and Choirs, historian Kevin Stonerock, mime Reed Steele and participation in the St. Charles School Plant and Flower Show and the Fort Wayne Plant Show (grades one through six), Special Friends Day (grades one and two), Indiana Colonial History Day (grade four) and the Read-A-Thon (grade four).

Many field trip experiences are encouraged including the Fort Wayne Children's Zoo, University of Notre Dame, Banks of the Wabash, Biz Town, Safety Village, Hanson Aggregates, Indiana State House, and local farms. Athletics for girls and boys start in grade five and include football, volleyball, cross-country, basketball, soccer, softball, track, tennis, wrestling, and cheerleading. We also established a now thriving chapter of Girls on the Run program in winter of 2013. St. Charles also supports the Cub Scout, Boy Scout, and Girl Scout programs for all grade levels. St. Charles is proud of its fine history and continues to be an academic, athletic, and spiritual leader in the Diocese.

Improvement Plan Stakeholder Involvement

Introduction

The responses should be brief, descriptive, and appropriate for the specific section. It is recommended that the responses are written offline and then transferred into the sections below.

Improvement Planning Process

Improvement Planning Process

Describe the process used to engage a variety of stakeholders in the development of the institution's improvement plan. Include information on how stakeholders were selected and informed of their roles, and how meetings were scheduled to accommodate them.

At the Diocesan level, all schools principals met with the Superintendent to discuss the process of how to disseminate AdvancEd surveys to all stakeholder groups within each Diocesan school. The Superintendent's Office wrote a letter to be given to all stakeholder groups in each school. A two week window was given to administer the two stakeholder surveys, AdvancEd Standards Survey and the Catholic Criteria Survey. The online link to the survey was shared with St. Charles stakeholders via text alerts, emails, Parent Newsletters, Staff/Faculty Newsletters, and on the school's website. School computers were also available for stakeholders during the two week windows for stakeholders to complete the surveys. This helped to ensure all groups had the opportunity to complete the surveys and participate in the process. The survey groups included parents, staff, students, parishioners, and community benefactors. Once the window closed, administrators and the Core team analyzed the survey results. These results were shared with all faculty members during faculty meetings.

Describe the representations from stakeholder groups that participated in the development of the improvement plan and their responsibilities in this process.

1.Pastor and AssociatePastors

2.St. Charles SchoolBoard

3.St. Charles AdvancEd CoreTeam

4.Parishioners

5.Parents

6.Teachers andAdministrators

7.Staff

8.Students

Stakeholder survey data was used to complete our school's AdvancEd Self-Assessment by the St. Charles AdvancEd Core Team. The results of the survey were then analyzed to compile strengths, weaknesses, and areas of improvement to populate the AdvancEd reporting process. Ongoing communication was provided among the Core Team and shared with the faculty.